sbuckinghamnj: Red (White-cheeked) Warbler
sbuckinghamnj: Golden-browed Warbler - a denizen of the high elevation pine-oak forests of the Sierra Madre de Oaxaca
sbuckinghamnj: Collared Towhee - an endemic of southern Mexico
sbuckinghamnj: Black Thrush
sbuckinghamnj: Boucard's Wren
sbuckinghamnj: White-eared Hummingbird
sbuckinghamnj: Curve-billed Thrasher
sbuckinghamnj: Hepatic Tanager
sbuckinghamnj: Dusky Hummingbird
sbuckinghamnj: Black-headed Grosbeak female
sbuckinghamnj: Squirrel Cuckoo
sbuckinghamnj: Squirrel Cuckoo
sbuckinghamnj: Nutting's Flycatcher
sbuckinghamnj: Nutting's Flycatcher
sbuckinghamnj: Gray Silky-flycatcher m and f pair
sbuckinghamnj: Gray Silky-flycatcher
sbuckinghamnj: Olive Warbler
sbuckinghamnj: Brown-backed Solitaire
sbuckinghamnj: Gray-barred Wren - Mexican endemic
sbuckinghamnj: Dwarf Jay - endemic to southern Mexico
sbuckinghamnj: Dwarf Jay - endemic to southern Mexico
sbuckinghamnj: Blue-throated Mountain Gem
sbuckinghamnj: Steller's Jay
sbuckinghamnj: Steller's Jay
sbuckinghamnj: Steller's Jay - these jays in Mexico lack the black head of the western US Steller's, and have a nice white patch over the eye.
sbuckinghamnj: Rufous-capped Brushfinch - Mexican endemic
sbuckinghamnj: Yellow-eyed Junco
sbuckinghamnj: Here's what a White-winged Dove looks like whenit's not being eaten by a Cooper's Hawk.
sbuckinghamnj: I took this photo from my hotel window in downtown Oaxaca City in early evening. The Cooper's Hawk grabbed a White-winged Dove that was sitting on a power line and carried it over to the roof of the restaurant across the street to eat it.
sbuckinghamnj: White-throated Towhee - another Mexican endemic that liked to hide in thick brush and thornscrub.